Monday, March 12, 2012

How Do You Measure Up?

I have a math-teacher confession. (Again.) It's not something I'm proud of. Not something I like to admit.

I'm not very good at estimating measurements.

Oh, I'm okay at the small stuff, particularly with length. I can say, "This is about two inches," or even, "That's about fifteen centimeters." But if you go much beyond something I can hold in my hands, I'm pretty hopeless.

This drove me nuts in driver's ed. Rules like, "When parking on the street, you must be X feet from the corner," were useless for me. Thirty feet, fifty feet, doesn't matter. I have no mental gauge for a distance like that.

Weights are even worse. Give me something and ask me if it's closer to five pounds or ten, and I'll be straight-up guessing. I know the fifty-pound bags of salt are pretty close to the limit of what I can comfortably lug around, so if something else is close to that, my guesstimate will be okay.

You know what this all has in common? Experience.

I can estimate lengths of things smaller than a breadbox because I've done a lot of measuring with a 12-inch ruler. I can tell when things are close to that fifty-pound mark because lugging those salt bags down to the basement is a memorable experience. I don't have a lot of experience measuring and knowing larger distances.

I bet if I played football, I'd have a pretty good feel for five yards vs. ten yards vs. twenty.

Except ... I have students who play football and don't know what a yard is.

*headdesk*

As much as I'm not great with measurement, it's a much weaker area for many of my students. (Oh, if I could tell you how many times I've asked, "How many inches are in a foot?" or even, "How many months in a year?" and gotten blank stares!) Some of it's a language issue, and some is that it hasn't been prioritized in their previous years of math education. Mostly, it's a combination of both.

So, students in some of my math classes will be attacking objects with rulers and yardsticks and tape measures and scales. I will throw lots of questions at them like, "If you were measuring the water to fill up a bathtub, would you use gallons or cups?" And I will hope some of it sinks in.

What mad measurement skills do you have? What areas trip you up? Any tips or tricks? I'd love to hear 'em.

2 comments:

I am terrible at distances! The whole yards thing in driving especially! I do have a great sense of direction (ok that's not a measurement but it's something). I'm good with measuring food too. I can eyeball a cup or a tablespoon pretty acurately from cooking. That's about it...

Like Jenny, I virtually always know which direction I'm headed and can tell you with a glance if the chopped onions are 1/4 or 1/2 cup. I'm also pretty darn good at feet (from designing all landscaping and remodeling projects) and height.

But, if you ask me about gallons and pounds, I'll likely be way off. Additionally, I am worthless when it comes to conversions.